Some offbeat awards for NFL season

The official NFL awards will be handed out during Super Bowl week. The offbeat ones are being handed out now.

MOST MEMORABLE GAME

The season began with some sensational, down-to-the-wire matchups, including the overall opener, Green Bay's 42-34 win over New Orleans. It's also hard to forget Buffalo's wild 34-31 victory against New England in Week 3, or Detroit's stunning rally for a 34-30 win at Dallas in Week 4.

But for sheer impact, we have to go with two Tebow moments: Denver's 18-15 win at Miami in its sixth game and, seven weeks later, the 13-10 win over Chicago — both in overtime.

Against the Dolphins in his first start of 2011, Tebow was awful until it mattered. He sparked the Broncos by throwing two TD passes in the final 2:44, though, and ran in a 2-point conversion with 17 seconds to go, forcing OT. Denver won on Matt Prater's 52-yard field goal.

That ignited Tebowmania, and Denver kept delivering frantic rallies. But the magic seemed to run out against the Bears.

Not quite. After failing to score on their first dozen possessions, the Broncos erased a 10-0 deficit in the final 2:08 of regulation.

Tebow's 10-yard TD pass to Demaryius Thomas got them closer, and with Chicago trying to run out the clock, Marion Barber inexplicably went out of bounds. That saved enough time, 53 seconds, for Tebow to guide them in range for Prater's 59-yard kick to force overtime.

And with the Bears in field goal range in the extra period, Barber fumbled. From there, it was simply a matter of time before Tebow got Prater close enough, and Prater's 51-yard field goal won it.

We're still trying to catch our breath.

MOST FORGETTABLE GAME

Few games are more energizing to watch than great defensive battles. Cleveland's 6-3 victory over Seattle in October was not one of those.

Instead, it was virtually unwatchable.

Seattle was without QB Tarvaris Jackson, then lost RB Marshawn Lynch to a back injury — during pregame warmups. That the Seahawks even managed to score with 1:37 yards of offense was remarkable.

The teams combined for 15 penalties, three turnovers, and only Phil Dawson's two field goals of over 50 yards stood out.

PLAY OF THE YEAR

Arizona's Patrick Peterson, among the most exciting rookies to enter the league in a long time, has run back four punts for touchdowns, tying an NFL record. His 99-yarder to beat the Rams in overtime tops them all.

Peterson fielded the ball at the 1, avoided and then bounced off tacklers over the next 30 yards, then sped past everyone.

"I was like 'This team needs a play,'" Peterson said. "I decided to catch the ball and just run for my life."

BEST TURNAROUND

The shift from also-ran and nonplayoff team since 2002 began when the 49ers hired Jim Harbaugh from Stanford. He brought a fresh, competitive attitude, found a way to make QB Alex Smith more than functional, and had San Francisco believing in itself from Day 1 of training camp.

Runner-up: Denver, at 2-5 and headed for oblivion, revamped the offense to fit Tim Tebow's skills, and surged to the top of the AFC West.

WORST TURNAROUND

Tampa Bay went from 10-6 as the youngest team in the league to still young, but 4-11 and in total disrepair. Even the Bucs' best players regressed this year.

They wound up being big busts, by far the most underachieving squad in the league — and in Andy Reid's tenure.

MOST UNDERRATED TEAM

A rookie quarterback (Andy Dalton) throwing to a rookie wideout (A.J. Green) after much offseason turmoil is not the recipe for success in the NFL. Yet, if the lowly regarded Bengals beat Baltimore on Sunday, they head to the playoffs. Give a ton of credit to the coaching staff led by Marvin Lewis.

MOST MEMORABLE POST-GAME HANDSHAKE

Harbaugh might have done a sensational coaching job, but his postgame greeting style could use some work. The blowup with Lions coach Jim Schwartz provided the best (and worst) handshake moment since Bill Belichick and Eric Mangini.

BEST DECISION

The NFL and NFLPA finally getting together on a new collective bargaining agreement, ensuring 10 years of labor peace.

WORST DECISION

Falcons coach Mike Smith going for a fourth-and-inches at Atlanta's 29 in overtime. Michael Turner's run was stuffed by the Saints, who then kicked a winning field goal.

LAW AND DISORDER

Barring a complete reversal of conduct, the Raiders will break the NFL mark for penalty yards, needing 12 against San Diego — which they could get on the coin toss if they misbehave.

Individually, it's hard to distinguish between Steelers LB James Harrison, the first player suspended (one game) for an illegal hit (on Browns QB Colt McCoy) under the NFL's stricter guidelines, or Lions DT Ndamukong Suh (two games) for his stomping on Packers lineman Evan Dietrich-Smith on Thanksgiving Day.

BEST ASSISTANT COACH

Texans defensive coordinator Wade Phillips again proved why he is among the best at coaching one unit. Houston's defensive improvement, even without Mario Williams for much of the season, has been sensational. And when Phillips was sidelined for kidney/gall bladder surgery in December, Houston promptly lost two straight.

BEST MOVE INTO END ZONE

Making like an Olympic gymnast, Bengals WR Jerome Simpson vaulted over Cardinals linebacker Daryl Washington, landed on his feet for a touchdown, then raised both arms for sticking the landing.

"A lot of the guys gave me a 10 on it," Simpson said. "I think it was like a 9 maybe, because I touched the ground (with the hand) a little bit."

WORST MOVE INTO END ZONE

Tony Romo going back to pass against the Giants, avoiding Jason Pierre-Paul's sack attempt near the goal line, then going down to all fours and sprawling into the end zone for a New York safety.

BEST NFL BROADCAST CREW

Since ESPN put together its Monday night trio of Mike Tirico, Jon Gruden and Ron Jaworski, this has been no contest. Tirico is the smoothest of play-by-play announcers who also offers some insight and raises controversial issues. He brings out the best in his highly opinionated and insightful partners, and their sense of humor isn't forced.

Gruden's best moment: toying with crutches in the booth and threatening Jaworski with them as Gruden tried to figure out how Sean Payton could coach while using them.

BEST NFL STUDIO SHOW

NBC's "Football Night in America," in part because it's no yukfest, as are nearly all the other shows, but mainly for its willingness to tackle tough topics. Tony Dungy and Rodney Harrison have no peers as commentators about the games and the sport itself.

UNDER-THE-RADAR STARS

Every one of these guys was a major contributor this year, even without much fanfare. In alphabetical order: PK David Akers, 49ers; T Jeff Backus, Lions; WR Doug Baldwin, Seahawks; TE Jake Ballard, Giants; LB Connor Barwin, Texans; WR Antonio Brown, Steelers;

"It's chaos out there. A lot is going on more than you see. It's like 'The Matrix' out there with a little bit of 'Inception.' It's a little bit crazy." — Baltimore's Terrell Suggs, a movie buff, describing the action after he had three sacks in a 24-10 win over Indianapolis.

AP Sports Writer Richard Rosenblatt in New York and Joe Kay in Cincinnati contributed to this story.